 |
The
Hostile
Takeover
of
America,
Fight
the
Bailout!
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By: John
Caelan
Thursday,
September
25, 2008
IT'S NOT
OVER!
The headline's
oscillate
between
proclamations
of
bailout
success and dark
forebodings--the
visual
representation
of this
is
conveniently
graphed
for us
on the
stock
indexes
for the
day.
"See?"
they
taunt.
"See how
the
market gets
better
when
we say
the
bailout
is at
hand?
See how
it gets
worse
when
word of
your
stonewalling
gets
out?"
We
cannot
let up
on the
Congress,
and,
frankly,
at this
point we
should
be
calling
our
state
representatives
as
well.
We must
accept
the
reality
of this
situation:
This
bailout has
minimal
impact
on the
American
people;
it is
primarily
about
paying
off
foreign
interests
before
the
collapse,
even if
that
process
is to be
heavily
veiled
and
masked
by
transactions.
The $700
billion
dollars
is
nothing
in the
face of
the
problem
at
hand.
It is
enough
to save
a few
prominent
corporations,
leaving
them in
position
to sweep
up the
remnants
at
fire-sale
prices.
The
great
rush to
get this
bailout
through
isn't
about
saving
the
markets.
It's
about
sucking
in as
much
capital
as
possible
before
the
market
collapses.
As
quickly
as the
Treasury
writes
the
check,
the
recipient
corporations
will
retrench
and
shift
their
money
out of
the U.S.
Dollar.
Foreign
funds
will buy
stock
rapidly,
in
companies
that
hold
solid
assets,
because
they
need to
buy
something
fast
with
those
dollars.
It is
the
collapse
of the
derivitives
market
that
looms,
trillions
of
dollars
in
"credit
default
swaps"
(62
trillion
in the
Unites
States
alone,
according
to the International
Swaps
and
Derivatives
Association), basically
insurance
bonds
against
losses
in other
credit
instruments,
bundled
and sold
over and
over
again, like
some
kind
of world-wide
Ponzi
scheme.
It's not
just the
taxpayers
holding
the bag
here; it
is
mutual
funds
and
pension
plans
and
savers
from
here and
other
nations
who are
all
about to
get
flattened.
So far,
every
time the
true
market
price of
these
bonds
rears its
ugly
head, it
is
pennies
on the
dollar,
and this
unveiling
is what
they
have
been
fighting
off
since
Bear
Sterns.
The great
lie is
that
this
bail out
will
'unclog'
the
credit
pipes--as
if other
people
are
sitting
around
with
trillions
of
dollars
ready to
buy out
junk
bonds at
above-market
prices.
This is
an
almost
laughable
theory
being
presented
to the
people
of the
United
States.
"If we
buy
$700,000,000,000
of these
bad,
severely
overvalued
bonds at
above-market
prices,
then
others
will buy
the
remaining
$61.3
trillion
of bad,
severely
overvalued
bonds at
above
market-prices."
Right.
Come on,
kids..
Follow
the
piper
down to
the
river...
But this
isn't
the
dialogue that
is happening
in the
public
forum
(yeah, I
use that
loosely).
President
Bush all
but
confessed
that the
sins of
the
world
market
seizure
are
borne by
the USA,
though
he makes
it sound
like an
unforeseen
consequence,
like all
gamblers
do when
the pot
goes the
other
way.
And he
did a
great
job of
redirecting
attention
towards
mortgages
as the
entirety
of the
problem,
instead
of
merely
the
first
crack in
a dam
made of
cheap
clay.
What he
cannot
say is
this:
"It is
the
derivatives
market
that has
created
hundreds
of
trillions
in false
wealth,
and it
is this
market
that is
imploding.
We are
entering
a severe
recession
that
will
result
in the
collapse
and
restructuring
of the
economy
in ways
you
cannot
imagine,
though
many
people
have
imagined
it and
you
probably
should
have
listened
more.
As far
as the
bailout,
if you
knew
what we
know,
you'd be
looting,
too..."
President
Bush met
with
McCain
and
Senator
Obama
today.
This
isn't
about
negotiating
the
bailout;
this is
about
negotiating
with the
voters.
I wish
it was
different
on
either
front.
By the
way,
President
Bush, if
you ever
wanted
to
have your Anakin
Skywalker
moment,
veto the
bill no
matter
what and
tell
people
what's
really
going
on.
Your
father
would
become a
footnote...
There is
not
enough
money in
the
world to
circumvent
a
massive
correction
in the
market.
Literally.
That's
the
problem.
There is
not a
lot of
money,
actual
wealth,
at all.
There
are just
a lot of
people
saying
they
have
money.
They
hold up
a bond
that's
worth
six
cents
and
declare,
"This is
worth a
dollar."
You
think it
is a
damnable
offense that
some
family
lies on
a
mortgage
application,
exaggerating
assets,
to get a
loan?
Corporations
like
Lehman,
Fannie
and
Freddie,
AIG, and
the
whole
line up
yet to
come all
did this
to the
tune of
hundreds
of
billions.
But with
every
default,
more of
these
toxic
bonds
get
found
out.
You see,
the
corporations
aren't
really
losing
money;
they are
just
being
forced
to
reveal
that
they
didn't
have the
money in
the
first
place.
This is
why "the
credit"
has come
to a
standstill.
That is
the
usual
consequence
of lying
to your
creditors...
Your
friends
and
family
must
understand
these
things
and take
action.
We need
whatever
flimsy
credit
we have
left to
help our
fellow
taxpayers
when
misfortune
lands
upon
them
above
and
beyond
the sum
of their
choices.
That's
why we
pool our
money,
that's
why we
hire
these
people
to
manage
the
People's
operations.
We, as a
nation,
need to
seriously
review
our
hiring
practices...
Keep
calling
your
Senator,
your
representatives,
your
Governor,
your
mayor.
Hammer
them
with
this
message:
You've
bailed
out
enough.
Near a
trillion
dollars
already.
We will
reinstate
the
value of
the
dollar
by
working
our way
out of
this
mess, as
a people
who all
seek the
same
liberty,
regardless
of how
we often
differ
in the
application
of that
liberty.
We will
not bail
you out,
and
if the
fall of
these corporations
results
in the
bought-and-sold
members
of
Congress
and
members
of the
administration
losing
their
revenue
streams,
so be
it.
Maybe,
if there
is no
damn
money to
be made
in D.C.,
we can
get some
people
in there
who
actually
want to
fulfill
their
oaths.
Listen
to what
Bush
said and
shake
your
head
free of
the
patter
of
hyperbole.
You
already
can't
get
credit,
and
frankly
you
shouldn't
go anymore
into
debt
anyway.
You
already
can't
find a
good
job, or
at least
a job
that
feels
like you
contributed
something
at the
end of
the
day.
You
already
are
paying
escalating
prices
for
everything,
and this
new
addition
of debt
will
dilute
the
dollar
further,
and you
will pay
more--inflation
is
simply a
form of
taxation.
It's
called
monetizing
the
debt.
Either
way, we
lose.
We can't
convert
our
paychecks
overnight
into
Swiss
Francs.
We won't
know
when to
sell
that
gold we
hoarded,
and then
it will
be
confiscated.
And we,
unlike
the rest
of the
world,
have no
savings.
Let's
just get
on with
it.
Eight
years of
this
administration dangling
the
Sword of
Damocles
over our
heads,
the
constant
threat
of
disaster
used to
provoke
our
acceptance
of the
erosion
of our
Constitution
and Bill
of
Rights,
has
grown
old.
We've
given up
habeas
corpus,
we've
given up
the
right to
peaceful
protest,
we given
up
privacy
in our
homes.
We give
up a
free
press. We're
okay
with
torture,
now?
When I
joined
the
Marines
at 17, I
thought
we were
the good
guys.
Now,
we've
got an
Army
brigade
with
active
orders
on U.S.
soil,
the
first
time
since
the
Civil
War,
moving
to
Colorado,
having
been
trained
to
enforce
martial
law.
Now,
just to
bring it
home,
they
would
have us
give up
a
trillion
dollars.
So,
let's
just get
on with
it,
then.
Bring
the damn
crisis. Bring
your
shock
and awe.
We'll
show you
what we
got.
We'll
show you
that for
all of
your
divisiveness,
we are
not a
mass of
ignorant
people
incapable
of
adaptation,
courage,
unity
and
faith.
Get on
with it
already.
Get on
with
your
master
plan so
we can
plan for
our
tomorrow.
Yeah,
history
does
repeat
itself,
and at
the end,
the
empire
always
loses.
It loses
because
people
who
require
such
obscene
advantage
in life
in order
to
secure
success
are
weak,
and they
build
weak
structures,
in such
a hurry
to reach
the
heavens.
But we
are more
than
commerce,
or a
marketplace.
And we
are not
a nation
of
people
with a
Constitution
and Bill
of
Rights--We
are a
Nation
because
of the
Constitution
and Bill
of
Rights.
That is
the
agreement
that
binds
us. We
are
sovereign
individuals
who
consent
to be a
Nation,
through
agreed
upon
rules of
law and
truthful
representation.
There is
no
royalty
or
papacy
that
dare lay
claim to
our free
will--that
is what
our
founders
recognized,
that is
the
experiment
of our
democratic
republic
crafted
from
their
humility,
and that
is the
experiment
still
left
undone.
That we
would
choose
to avoid
for a
short
time
discomfort
rather
than
secure
the
integrity
of that
great
experiment
is
baffling.
It
renders
the acts
and
sacrifices
of those
before
us as
lesser
deeds,
and
resigns
the
promise
of those
who will
follow
to the
ambitions
of empty
men.
Say no
to this
bailout.
Save the
bailout
for us.
We are
going to
need it. |